2013 bilderberg conference
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The 2013 Bilderberg Conference took place June 6–9, 2013, at The Grove hotel in Watford, Hertfordshire, England. It was the first Bilderberg Group conference to be held in the United Kingdom since the 1998 meeting in Turnberry, Scotland.
History
The Daily Telegraph likened the annual conference to "a political version of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, which draws members of high society to discuss business and the economy." A British Member of Parliament and former Bilderberg attendee quoted by the Independent on Sunday also likened the annual conference to the World Economic Forum, and said it was "...not that exciting, in fact it's a bit run of the mill".
Around 140 participants are expected to participate in the meetings annually. Attendance to the event is by invitation only. No delegates pay to attend the conferences, and no delegates attend by conference phone or satellite. The conference programme never includes entertainment or performances.
The confidential nature of Bilderberg led to criticism of the group's lack of transparency and accountability, along with concerns about potential lobbying. Outside the 2013 meeting, Labour MP Michael Meacher said, "If there is any conference which required transparency, which required democratic accountability, it is the Bilderberg conference because this is really where the top brass of Western finance capitalism meet ... including government ministers." Conservative MP Douglas Carswell was also concerned about the privacy of the meetings, by saying "...you would have thought the least our ruling elite could do is discuss these issues in public."
There has also been speculation from conspiracy theorists about the purpose of the meetings. The secretive approach to staging the conferences has led to the younger generation of Bilderberg attendees being uncomfortable with the policy of total media exclusion, as reported by the Independent on Sunday. A previous attendee told the Independent that he sympathised with "those who tell us the confidentiality policy only encourages the conspiracy theorists. It does."
Of the format and outcome of the conference, the Bilderberg website said, "There is no detailed agenda, no resolutions are proposed, no votes are taken, and no policy statements are issued."
A Bilderberg Fringe Festival was held near the conference. The festival featured speakers, comedy, music, workshops, arts and entertainment.
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron, attended the conference on 7 June. Cameron attended in a private capacity and was not accompanied by civil servants, even though it is customary for the Prime Minister to be accompanied by civil servants when he meets business leaders.
Press coverage
Journalists were banned from attending the event, with the exception of Lilli Gruber, although a press office was provided by the Bilderberg Group. The group is represented by a German corporate communications firm.
The meeting was well covered by the British media, with frequent Bilderberg writer Charlie Skelton noting the presence of Reuters, the Associated Press, Channel 4 News, The Times and the Press Association.
Agenda
A list of key topics for discussion at the 2013 Bilderberg conference was published on the Bilderberg website shortly before the meeting. Topics for discussion included:
"Can the U.S. and Europe grow faster and create jobs?"
"Jobs, entitlement and debt"
"How big data is changing almost everything"
"Nationalism and populism"
"U.S. foreign policy"
"Africa's challenges"
"Cyber warfare and the proliferation of asymmetric threats"
"Major trends in medical research"
"Online education: promise and impacts"
"Politics of the European Union"
"Developments in the Middle East"
Delegates (alphabetical)
For the first time, a list of expected delegates was published by the Bilderberg Group. Also listed below are their notable roles or then recent roles as of the time of the meeting (2013).
Paul Achleitner, Chairman of the Supervisory Board, Deutsche Bank
Josef Ackermann, Chairman of the Board, Zurich Insurance Group
Marcus Agius, former Chairman, Barclays
Helen Alexander, Chairman, UBM plc
Roger C. Altman, Executive Chairman, Evercore Partners
Matti Apunen, Director, Finnish Business and Policy Forum EVA
Susan Athey, Professor of Economics, Stanford Graduate School of Business
Aslı Aydıntaşbaş, columnist, Milliyet
Ali Babacan, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister for Economic and Financial Affairs
Ed Balls, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
Francisco Pinto Balsemão, Chairman and CEO, Impresa
Nicolas Barré, Managing Editor, Les Echos
José Manuel Barroso, President, European Commission
Nicolas Baverez, Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher
Olivier de Bavinchove, Commander, Eurocorps
John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine, University of Oxford
Franco Bernabè, Chairman and CEO, Telecom Italia
Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO, Amazon
Carl Bildt, Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs
Anders Borg, Swedish Minister for Finance
Jean-François van Boxmeer, CEO, Heineken
Svein Richard Brandtzæg, President and CEO, Norsk Hydro
Oscar Bronner, publisher, Der Standard Medienwelt
Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington, former Honorary Chairman, Bilderberg Meetings
Juan Luis Cebrián, Executive Chairman, PRISA
Edmund Clark, President and CEO, Toronto-Dominion Bank
Kenneth Clarke, Cabinet Minister
Bjarne Corydon, Danish Minister of Finance
Sherard Cowper-Coles, Business Development Director, International, BAE Systems
Étienne Davignon, Belgian Minister of State; Former Chairman, Bilderberg Meetings
Ian Davis, Senior Partner Emeritus, McKinsey & Company
Robbert Dijkgraaf, Director and Leon Levy Professor, Institute for Advanced Study
Haluk Dinçer, President, Retail and Insurance Group, Sabancı Holding
Robert Dudley, Group Chief Executive, BP
Nicholas Eberstadt, Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy, American Enterprise Institute
Espen Barth Eide, Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Börje Ekholm, President and CEO, Investor AB
Thomas Enders, CEO, EADS
Michael Evans, Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs
Ulrik Federspiel, Executive Vice President, Haldor Topsøe
Martin Feldstein, Professor of Economics, Harvard University; President Emeritus, National Bureau of Economic Research
François Fillon, former French Prime Minister
Mark Fishman, President, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research
Douglas Flint, Group Chairman, HSBC
Paul Gallagher, Senior Counsel
Timothy Geithner, Former Secretary of the Treasury
Michael Gfoeller, US Political Consultant
Donald Graham, Chairman and CEO, The Washington Post Company
Ulrich Grillo, CEO, Grillo-Werke AG
Lilli Gruber, journalist - Anchorwoman, La 7 TV
Luis de Guindos, Spanish Minister of Economy and Competitiveness
Stuart Gulliver, Group Chief Executive, HSBC
Felix Gutzwiller, Member of the Swiss Council of States
Victor Halberstadt, Professor of Economics, Leiden University; Former Honorary Secretary General of Bilderberg Meetings
Olli Heinonen, Senior Fellow, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Simon Henry, CFO, Royal Dutch Shell
Paul Hermelin, Chairman and CEO, Capgemini
Pablo Isla, Chairman and CEO, Inditex
Kenneth M. Jacobs, Chairman and CEO, Lazard
James A. Johnson, Chairman, Johnson Capital Partners
Thomas Jordan, Chairman of the Governing Board, Swiss National Bank
Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Managing Director, Lazard
Robert D. Kaplan, Chief Geopolitical Analyst, Stratfor
Alex Karp, founder and CEO, Palantir Technologies
John Kerr, Independent Member, House of Lords
Henry A. Kissinger, Chairman, Kissinger Associates
Klaus Kleinfeld, Chairman and CEO, Alcoa
Klaas Knot, President, De Nederlandsche Bank
Mustafa Koç, Chairman, Koç Holding
Roland Koch, CEO, Bilfinger
Henry Kravis, Co-Chairman and Co-CEO, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
Marie-Josée Kravis, Senior Fellow and Vice Chair, Hudson Institute
André Kudelski, Chairman and CEO, Kudelski Group
Ulysses Kyriacopoulos, Chairman, S&B Industrial Minerals
Christine Lagarde, Managing Director, International Monetary Fund
Kurt Lauk, Chairman of the Economic Council to the CDU, Berlin
Lawrence Lessig, Roy L. Furman Professor of Law and Leadership, Harvard Law School
Thomas Leysen, Chairman of the Board of Directors, KBC Bank
Christian Lindner, Party Leader, Free Democratic Party (FDP NRW)
Stefan Löfven, Party Leader, Social Democratic Party (SAP)
Peter Löscher, President and CEO, Siemens
Peter Mandelson, Chairman, Global Counsel; Chairman, Lazard
Jessica T. Mathews, President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Frank McKenna, Chair, Brookfield Asset Management
John Micklethwait, Editor-in-Chief, The Economist
Thierry de Montbrial, President, French Institute for International Relations
Mario Monti, former Italian Prime Minister
Craig Mundie, Senior Advisor to the CEO, Microsoft
Alberto Nagel, CEO, Mediobanca
Princess Beatrix of The Netherlands
Andrew Ng, co-founder, Coursera
Jorma Ollila, Chairman, Royal Dutch Shell
David Omand, Visiting Professor, King's College London
George Osborne, British Chancellor of the Exchequer
Emanuele Ottolenghi, Senior Fellow, Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Soli Özel, Senior Lecturer, Kadir Has University; Columnist, Habertürk
Alexis Papahelas, Executive Editor, Kathimerini
Şafak Pavey, Turkish MP
Valérie Pécresse, French MP
Richard Perle, Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
David H. Petraeus, General, United States Army (Retired)
Paulo Portas, Portugal Minister of State and Foreign Affairs
Robert Prichard, Chair, Torys
Viviane Reding, Vice President and Commissioner for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission
Heather Reisman, CEO, Indigo Books & Music
Hélène Rey, Professor of Economics, London Business School
Simon Robertson, Partner, Robertson Robey Associates; Deputy Chairman, HSBC
Gianfelice Rocca, Chairman, Techint
Jacek Rostowski, Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister
Robert Rubin, Co-Chairman, Council on Foreign Relations; Former Secretary of the Treasury
Mark Rutte, Dutch Prime Minister
Andreas Schieder, Austrian State Secretary of Finance
Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman, Google
Rudolf Scholten, Member of the Board of Executive Directors, Oesterreichische Kontrollbank
António José Seguro, Secretary General, Portuguese Socialist Party
Jean-Dominique Senard, CEO, Michelin
Kristin Skogen Lund, Director General, Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise
Anne-Marie Slaughter, Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University
Peter Sutherland, Chairman, Goldman Sachs
Martin Taylor, Former Chairman, Syngenta
Tidjane Thiam, Group CEO, Prudential
Peter A. Thiel, President, Thiel Capital
Craig B. Thompson, President and CEO, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Jakob Topsøe, Partner, AMBROX Capital
Jutta Urpilainen, Finnish Minister of Finance
Daniel Vasella, Honorary Chairman, Novartis
Peter Voser, CEO, Royal Dutch Shell
Brad Wall, Premier of Saskatchewan, Canada
Jacob Wallenberg, Chairman, Investor AB
Kevin Warsh, Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Galen Weston, Executive Chairman, Loblaw Companies
Baroness Williams of Crosby, Member of the House of Lords
Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator, Financial Times
James D. Wolfensohn, Chairman and CEO, Wolfensohn and Company
David Wright, Vice Chairman, Barclays
Robert Zoellick, Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics
Policing
A private security company provided security at the hotel; in addition, the Bilderberg Group agreed to contribute toward the policing costs of the event. The local police force, Hertfordshire Police, were in talks with the Home Office about a grant for potential "unexpected or exceptional costs". The grant is provided if the costs threaten the "stability of their policing budget". A combined force of Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, and Cambridge constabularies prepared for the conference, with the assistance of specialist officers from the Metropolitan Police. Five rugby pitches belonging to the Fullerians RFC were hired by police for the duration of the event. The police operation for the Bilderberg conference was called Operation Discuss, and had been running for eighteen months prior to the start of the conference. The cost of policing was revealed after the conference to have been in the region of £1.3 million, with £500,000 having been offered to the police by the Bilderberg Group.
The mayor of Watford, Dorothy Thornhill, said she had concerns that the conference attracted "people who can and do cause violence and disturbance" but she was confident that the police could "minimise that and give them their right to protest". She was also "ambivalent about whether this is a good thing. It's potentially a positive thing as long as things don't kick off."
References
External links
(in English) Official website of the Bilderberg conference
Bilderberg 2013 - unofficial site
Bilderberg Fringe Festival